

Moreover, and that is the issue I am trying to fix, the Windows 10 tray bar battery indicator wont go past 60 while it used to go to 100.
ASUS G751JT WONT CHARGE FULL
After less than 300 cycles my battery is reported as having lost more than 50 of its full capacity.

My laptop is an ASUS N552VX bought 18 months ago. You were almost going to try "fixing" your 100% functional battery, heh. Windows ASUS Laptop batter won’t charge past 60. Unfortunately, it looks like people on the Asus forums are reporting that no G-Sync option has become available since updating, but it sure looks like it should. ASUS ROG G751JT (Core i7 4710HQ 2500 Mhz/17.3'/1920x1080/16.0Gb/2128Gb/DVD-RW/Wi-Fi/Bluetooth/Win 8 64) -, ,, ,,. In order to make sure your battery will last as long as possible, fully discharge it once a month. Asus just released a new BIOS for the G751JT with the following information: Description BIOS 207. Navigate to the Taskbar and select the Show hidden icons option at the bottom right corner. ASUS provides you with the Battery Health Charging feature and you can use it. In addition to the above methods, you may consider checking your battery health mode. Your battery continues to be charged extremely slowly to keep it at 98% until you actually use the battery. Use ASUS Battery Health Charging Feature. Otherwise you would see the battery drop to 97, 96, 95 etc as each day passes by. Once it hits that point the battery begins being trickle charged, just enough to keep it at a steady level. This is controlled by the built-in power/energy controller. The idea is that once the battery hits around 95-98% charge, charging stops in order to prevent battery life loss as these batteries should not be charged to full. You should actually worry about your battery being at 100%, not about it being at less than that. What's actually happening is your computer using a standard method of battery preservation and Windows knows this, which is why it's telling you that it's plugged in but not charging - simply because it does not need to. What you described in your post sounded more like your battery not charging at all, just discharging. This is 100% normal, standard behaviour for all laptops that I have seen in the past 5 years.
